Thank you. Merci.
I suspect that will be a very interesting discussion in our next election campaign, whenever that is.
In finishing up, I want to raise the issue that was raised by the Professional Institute of the Public Service with respect to Canada's losing its capacity to conduct science for the public good.
You state that since the 1990s, a disproportionate amount of federal government spending on S and T has gone to higher education. Government funding to higher education R and D as a share of GDP grew faster in Canada than in any other G-7 country between 1997 and 2005, but you're arguing that the funding has gone to our research universities rather than to the public service or to federal laboratories.
As you know, this is a very lively debate. In a decision taken some time back, prior to our government, perhaps some people took the view that the federal laboratories were not up to the standards of the universities and made a very conscious decision to fund research, especially basic research, through universities, rather than by increasing funding to federal laboratories or federal scientists.
It's a very active debate. I take your point on that. I believe AUCC will be here later on and will certainly present their view, and so will the G-13 universities.
I would like you to expand on this point and present your view on whether the government ought to prioritize federal funding for, say, federal laboratories as opposed to universities.